That sounds like a silly bet. If you want to see some complicated models and simulation, look at biomechanical engineering. Basic fluid flow is a mixture of fluids with different compressibility and viscosity, and chunks of squishy, sticky cells. I have seen decades of aero and control laws, but basic bioengineering was eye opening.

I'm not sure if there is because it seems the entire course is based around simulations being the primary teaching tool. The whole course seems to be structured around students building simulations to learn system dynamics better. It's a very interesting didactic concept, but I don't think most other university courses will teach the concepts in that same way. However, that's not to say you can't do the simulations yourself if you were to take the course from another university. For example, students in control systems often use MATLAB and Simulink to model dynamic systems.

If you go outside of the physics realm, there are Operations Research courses that are all modeling and simulation -- an entire series of courses. But the entire bet seems like a "mine is bigger than everyone elses" type bet.